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Temperature, productivity and habitat characteristics collectively drive lake food web structure.

Camille LeclercNathalie ReynaudPierre-Alain DanisFlorentina MoatarMartin DaufresneChristine ArgillierPhilippe Usseglio-PolateraValérie VerneauxNicolas DedieuVictor FrossardArnaud Sentis
Published in: Global change biology (2023)
While many efforts have been devoted to understand variations in food web structure among terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, the environmental factors influencing food web structure at large spatial scales remain hardly explored. Here, we compiled biodiversity inventories to infer food web structure of 67 French lakes using an allometric niche-based model and tested how environmental variables (temperature, productivity and habitat) influence them. By applying a multivariate analysis on 20 metrics of food web topology, we found that food web structural variations are represented by two distinct complementary and independent structural descriptors. The first is related to the overall trophic diversity, whereas the second is related to the vertical structure. Interestingly, the trophic diversity descriptor was mostly explained by habitat size (26.7% of total deviance explained) and habitat complexity (20.1%) followed by productivity (dissolved organic carbon: 16.4%; nitrate: 9.1%) and thermal variations (10.7%). Regarding, the vertical structure descriptor, it was mostly explained by water thermal seasonality (39.0% of total deviance explained) and habitat depth (31.9%) followed by habitat complexity (8.5%) and size (5.5%) as well as annual mean temperature (5.6%). Overall, we found that temperature, productivity and habitat characteristics collectively shape lake food web structure. We also found that intermediate levels of productivity, high levels of temperature (mean and seasonality), as well as large habitats are associated with the largest and most complex food webs. Our findings therefore highlight the importance of focusing on these three components especially in the context of global change, as significant structural changes of aquatic food webs could be expected under increased temperature, pollution and habitat alterations.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • nitric oxide
  • optical coherence tomography
  • quality improvement
  • particulate matter
  • organic matter
  • life cycle